
The way tennis careers end has a nearly mathematical quality. After years of persevering through qualifiers and rating figures that are worthless to those outside the sport, everything changes in just two weeks. On October 11, 2025, Maja Chwalińska was 24. During the majority of the year, she was a player rated in the low hundreds, which is a figure you hardly ever see on a sports broadcast unless the weather is terrible and the schedule is lengthy. Then came Paris in June 2026, and all of a sudden, everyone was curious about her identity, her background, and, strangely enough, her age.
Because Maja Chwalinska appears in photos to be someone who has just recently found the sport rather than someone who has been involved in it for nearly 20 years, the age debate surrounding her went viral online. After being born in the smaller town of Miechów, her family moved to the industrial city of Děbrowa Górnicza in southern Poland, where she took up a racket for the first time when she was seven years old. Her mother Marcela was a receptionist, while her father Tomasz was an electrician and miner. In hindsight, it might seem inevitable that a left hander from a working class Polish city would pursue a career in professional tennis, but when you watch someone place 113th in the world while the circuit’s Swiateks and Sabalenkas take home the trophies, it rarely feels that way.
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Full Name | Maja Ewa Chwalińska |
| Date of Birth | [11 October 2001] |
| Age (as of June 2026) | 24 years old |
| Birthplace | Miechow, Poland |
| Raised in | Dabrowa Gornicza, Poland |
| Nationality | Polish |
| Zodiac Sign | Libra |
| Height | 1.64–1.65 m (5 ft 5 in) |
| Playing Hand | Left-handed (two-handed backhand) |
| Coach | Jaroslav Machovský |
| Current WTA Ranking | No. 21 (career high, as of 8 June 2026) |
| Career Prize Money | $2,497,381 |
| Parents | Tomasz Chwalinsk (miner/electrician), Marcela Chwalinska (receptionist) |
| Turned Professional | Teenage years on the ITF and WTA circuit |
| Notable Result | Runner-up, Roland-Garros 2026 |
Her childhood idolization of Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, and Novak Djokovic provides insight into her tennis instincts and the type of game she was attempting to develop. More intriguingly, she grew up competing in junior competitions with Igaňątek. In 2015 and 2016, the two of them competed in the 14 and under and 16 and under European doubles circuits, winning both titles. Since they were ten years old, they have known one another. It’s difficult not to wonder what that specific friendship was like while Chwalińska spent years on the verge of professional viability and Čątek rose to the top of the global rankings.
The progression came to a complete halt about five years ago. She took a break from the circuit for almost four months while battling depression. When her Roland Garros run brought the detail back into the spotlight, Sports Illustrated was one among the publications that took it up. Her description of the aftermath was particularly noteworthy. According to her, she returned with the realization that her identity is no longer defined by her performance. Athletes are probably trained to say things like that during news conferences. Chwalińska’s whole return arc serves as proof of this; she returned, continued to build, and didn’t seem to be in a rush.
She attained a career high ranking of 113 in early May of 2026 by the spring. She entered Roland Garros 2026 as a qualifier, which meant she had to defeat Alice Ramé, Carole Monnet, and Suzan Lamens before the actual competition began in order to advance to the main draw. She was ranked 114 and did not appear in any previews. She wasn’t involved in any bracket discussions. She was probably given odds by the betting markets that would make a statistician cringe.
The events that transpired throughout the next two weeks are not typical. Former Australian Open finalist Zheng Qinwen was defeated by her. She defeated former world number three Maria Sakkari. She defeated Diane Parry, Diana Shnaider, Elise Mertens, and Anna Kalinskaya. The number of searches for her name nearly doubled with each round, and at some point, the Maja Chwalinska age question became a real Google trend because no one really thought she was who she seemed to be. She was the first qualifier in Roland Garros history to make it to the women’s singles final. She was a 24 year old Libra from an industrial city who was born on October 11, 2001.
The eighth seeded Mirra Andreeva defeated her 6 3, 6 2 in the final. On paper, the score seemed comfortable. As only the second qualifier to make it to a Grand Slam final in the Open Era, following Emma Raducanu’s incredible 2021 US Open, she had already cemented her position in the historical books at that moment. She was ranked 21st in the world in the WTA rankings that were released the following Monday. After receiving the runner up check, her prize money total which had been approximately $864,000 prior to Paris rose to over $2.4 million. In the technical terms of ranking algorithms, the jump was a 93 place increase in just two weeks.
As is typically the case following these performances, it’s still uncertain whether 24 marks the start of something enduring or a peak that is hard to replicate. Everyone looks at Raducanu’s aftermath as a warning. Observing Chwalinska’s body of work instead of just one tournament, however, gives the impression that the mental transformation she described following her return from break was more structural than motivating. She doesn’t play like someone who is in a rush. She plays with the attitude that the outcomes are unimportant. This distinction is important. The real concern is whether the hard courts, clay courts, and grass she has hardly used at her level will hold up over the next five tennis seasons. She’s 24. You have time to find out.
i) https://biographywallah.com/maja-chwalinska/
ii) https://www.tennisboard.com/player/maja-chwalinska
iii) https://matchstat.com/tennis/player/Maja%20Chwalinska/
iv) https://bolavip.com/en/tennis/maja-chwalinska-profile